• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

***Official*** South Africa in New Zealand 2012

Neil Young

State Vice-Captain
just watching this in Fox now. Extraordinary. Really extraordinary.
Yeah. It's really quite stunning in its ineptitude. Hard to quote know where to apportion the blame. Ryder, perversely enough, has to take a fair chunk. A little obsessed by his 50 it seemed.
 
Last edited:

M0rphin3

International Debutant
FML, yet to watch the highlights, but I thought it was pretty much over when Jesse was going good. How the **** did they manage to **** this up?

And from what I gather, SAffers didn't bowl that great either - so should've take some dire batting to screw that up.
 

Dissector

International Debutant
I remember checking the scores with 3 overs to go, wondering whether it was worth watching and deciding that NZ had it in the bag. Little did I know.:laugh:

Though it has to be said that the biggest choke of the day was de Lange. Bowling a front-foot no ball on the last ball when the other side needs six to win is just astonishing.

As an Indian fan, my chief cricket pleasures these days are watching other teams screw up.:ph34r:
 

NasserFan207

International Vice-Captain
Well England's pacers bowled a similar length against Pakistan during the death overs of the ODI series. If your someone other than Malinga, it can be a good tactic because short bowling is harder to hit than yorkers gone wrong. Sometimes the batsmen just miss.
 

BeeGee

International Captain
Possibly the worst, most inexplicable choke in history.

Made for an exciting game, though.

Bring on the ODIs!
 

SteveNZ

International Coach
I still can't get over how poor Jesse's dismissal was. Still needing a run a ball, six wickets in hand, he's well set (albeit with a loss of momentum up to 50) and you'd back yourself in every time in the last over to get 6 with him and a relatively set Franklin. And he does that. Inexplicable.
 

Briony

International Debutant
I remember checking the scores with 3 overs to go, wondering whether it was worth watching and deciding that NZ had it in the bag. Little did I know.:laugh:

Though it has to be said that the biggest choke of the day was de Lange. Bowling a front-foot no ball on the last ball when the other side needs six to win is just astonishing.

As an Indian fan, my chief cricket pleasures these days are watching other teams screw up.:ph34r:
In theory yes, but it wasn't as if they needed seven, that would be a choke. While a batsman can win it with six you still need to focus on how to bowl to prevent this and can easily forget about your front foot. If it's more than six, you can simply amble up and bowl behind the crease to make sure of it.

You could also argue that on balance de Lange did very well to pull it back after being expensive early on. His strategy of bowling short and wide to new, lower order batsmen was probably the correct one. His extra pace did seem to unsettle them a bit.
 

wellAlbidarned

International Coach
I get the impression that De Lange is one of those bowlers who just rolls up and slings it down as fast as possible without much thought tbh. Not saying he can't/won't be effective though.
 

SeamUp

International Coach
I get the impression that De Lange is one of those bowlers who just rolls up and slings it down as fast as possible without much thought tbh. Not saying he can't/won't be effective though.
Definitely not the case at all. He has shown a good skill set but extremely raw still.

For instance in Hamilton he was bowling yorkers that were tailing in at the toes in the last over and the last over yesterday backed himself to beat the lower order with the shorter stuff combined with his pace. Thinking out the situation.

I also thought his first over yesterday was pretty impressive, very good bouncer at Guptill and then next ball bowled an absolute peach the left Guptill and if there was a 2nd slip he would have gobbled it but it just shot to the small boundary for 4. So set himself a base if anything but then those thick inside edges combined with him bowling a touch to straight allowed balls to squirt behind square leg for 4.

He can tend to slide it down leg but his accuracy will get more consistent the more he bowls.
 

SeamUp

International Coach
The weather doesn't look to clever for tomorrow. Any Wellington locals reckon the forecast for rain is correct? Because I don't want to run the risk of getting up at 3am if its bloody raining!
 

SeamUp

International Coach
I'd rain if I was a cloud in Wellington too.
Haha and here I'm thinking its like the tropics in New Zealand! :D

About time you get some better clouds then! :p Rugby season started today so its fitting. My lot are playing the Hurricanes but it will be in good weather in Cape Town. Maybe they should swop venues?
 

Mike5181

International Captain
The weather doesn't look to clever for tomorrow. Any Wellington locals reckon the forecast for rain is correct? Because I don't want to run the risk of getting up at 3am if its bloody raining!
There's supposed to be a couple of mid-morning showers but it should be mostly sunny before the game starts and after that there's no rain.
 

SeamUp

International Coach
Swap the teams. Get the rugby players playing the cricket and the cricketers playing the rugby.
Too many gaps will be found in both defences then. :D

Even if it is raining, probably still give it a check at 3am. Just hope those Wellington clouds feel a little different tomorrow.
 

Top